The phase where normal cell functioning and cell replication occurs
What is Interphase I?
The phase where normal cell functioning occurs
What is Interphase II?
The phase in which there are normal cell functions and checkpoints
Mendel is widely regarded as this
The type of mutation in which a part of a chromosome is duplicated
What is duplication?
What is Prophase I?
The phase in which spindles form and chromosomes condense
What is Prophase II?
The phase in which DNA is condensed
What is Prophase?
The law that says one factor dominates the other in a heterozygous pair
Mendel's Law of Dominance
The mutation in which a part of a chromosome is gone/missing
The phase in which tetrads are lined up in the middle of the cell.
What is Metaphase I?
The phase in which chromosomes are lined up in the middle of the cell
The phase in which chromosomes are line up in the middle of the cell
What is Metaphase?
The law that says you inherit one allele from each parent
What is Mendel's Law of Segregation?
The mutation in which parts of the chromosome are switched
What is inversion?
The phase in which the tetrads are split
What is Anaphase I?
The phase in which the sister chromatids split
What is Anaphase II?
What is Anaphase?
The law that says genes separate independently
What is Mendel's law of Independent Assortment?
The mutation in which 2 parts of 2 chromosomes mix and parts of one chromosome are on the other
What is translocation?
The phase in which 2 haploid cells are the end product
Telophase I?
The phase in which 4 haploid cells are the end result
What is Telophase II?
The phase in which cells start to split apart
What is Telophase?
Gregor Mendel studied this type of plant
Down's Syndrome is caused by this
What is Nondisjunction?